USA

Sanders v. United States

Fed. claims court 31 March 2025
Party
Pro Se Litigant
AI Tool
Implied / unconfirmed

Hallucinated Content

Fabricated

  1. Case Law

    Plaintiff cited a nonexistent case to argue CFC jurisdiction; the reporter citation points to a different case and subject, and neither Defendant nor the Court could locate any such case.

  2. Case Law

    Plaintiff cited a nonexistent CFC case to support unjust enrichment jurisdiction; the citation leads to a different case in the reporter.

  3. Case Law

    Plaintiff relied on a case that does not exist in the Federal Claims reporter to assert jurisdiction over unjust enrichment.

  4. Case Law

    Plaintiff cited a nonexistent case to claim CFC jurisdiction over unjust enrichment; the reporter citation corresponds to a different case.

Misrepresented

  1. Case Law

    Plaintiff mischaracterized Hunt Building as acknowledging unjust enrichment claims in government contracts; the actual case is a bid protest with no mention of unjust enrichment.

  2. Legal Norm

    Plaintiff asserted that restitution is a standalone money-mandating source conferring CFC jurisdiction over unjust enrichment; the Court held restitution is not independently money-mandating and such claims lie outside CFC jurisdiction absent a separate money-mandating provision.


Outcome

Warning

Notes

AI UseThe plaintiff did not admit to using AI, but the court inferred likely use due to the submission of fabricated citations matching the structure and behavior typical of generative AI hallucinations. The decision referenced public concerns about AI misuse and cited specific examples of federal cases where similar misconduct occurred.Hallucination DetailsPlaintiff cited:Tucker v. United States, 24 Cl. Ct. 536 (1991) – does not existFargo v. United States, 184 F.3d 1096 (Fed. Cir. 1999) – fabricated citation pointing to an unrelated Ninth Circuit caseBristol Bay Native Corporation v. United States, 87 Fed. Cl. 122 (2009) – fictionalQuantum Construction, Inc. v. United States, 54 Fed. Cl. 432 (2002) – nonexistentHunt Building Co., LLC v. United States, 61 Fed. Cl. 243 (2004) – real case misused; contains no mention of unjust enrichmentRuling/SanctionThe court granted the government’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1). Although the court found a clear Rule 11 violation, it opted not to sanction the plaintiff, citing the evolving context of AI use and the absence of bad faith. A formal warning was issued, with notice that future hallucinated filings may trigger sanctions.Key Judicial ReasoningJudge Roumel noted that plaintiff’s attempt to rely on fictional case law was a misuse of judicial resources and a disservice to her own advocacy. The court cited multiple precedents addressing hallucinated citations and AI misuse, stating clearly that while leeway is granted to pro se litigants, the line is crossed when filings rely on fictitious law.


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